James Bigheart

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

BornPun-Kah-Wi-Tah-An-Kah
c.1838
DiedOctober 5, 1908 (age 69–70)
CitizenshipOsage Nation
PartyNon-Progressives
James Bigheart
James Bigheart in May 1894
Principal chief of the Osage Nation
Personal details
BornPun-Kah-Wi-Tah-An-Kah
c.1838
DiedOctober 5, 1908 (age 69–70)
CitizenshipOsage Nation
PartyNon-Progressives
EducationOsage Mission's post
Known forNegotiating the creation of the Osage Nation Mineral Estate
Military service
AllegianceUnited States
Branch/serviceUnion Army
Years of service1862–1865
RankFirst lieutenant

James Bigheart (Osage romanized Pun-Kah-Wi-Tah-An-Kah; c.1838 – October 5, 1908), also known as Big Jim, was an Osage politician who served as principal chief of the Osage Nation.

James Bigheart was born Pun-Kah-Wi-Tah-An-Kah in 1838 to Nun-tsa-tum-kah and Wah-hui-shah near St. Paul, Kansas. Bigheart converted to Catholicism, was educated at the Osage Mission's post, and was fluent in multiple languages.[1][a] He enlisted in the 9th Kansas Cavalry Regiment of the Union Army in Iola, Kansas on January 19, 1862. He left the army as a first lieutenant on March 22, 1865.[1]

Osage leadership

He signed his first treaty with the United States on May 27, 1868. In 1870, the United States bought the Osage Nation reservation in Kansas, and the Osage in turn bought a reservation in Indian Territory from the Cherokee Nation. In 1871, he moved to Silver Lake (now Bartlesville) and then to Pawhuska in 1872. He built a home near Bird Creek, about 15 miles (24 km) southeast of Pawhuska. In 1875, he became principal chief of the Osage Nation. By 1881 Bigheart was the leader of the "Full Bloods", or Non-Progressives Party, of the Osage Nation.[1][b] Bigheart is credited with leading his faction to delay the allotment of the Osage Nation reservation by about ten years. When the Osage Nation organized its first written constitution, Bigheart was the President of the National Council who drafted it and a signer of the document. When the first Osage elections were held in November 1882, Bigheart became the first elected Principal Chief of the Osage Nation. He suffered a stroke in March 1906 and was left partially paralyzed.[1] He died in Bigheart, Oklahoma on October 5, 1908.[3][4]

Legacy

Notes

References

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